Innovative Approaches to Landslide Monitoring and Urban-Scale Slope Stability Analysis

A special issue of Geosciences (ISSN 2076-3263).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2024 | Viewed by 1009

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Research Institute for Geo-Hydrological Protection (IRPI), Italian National Research Council, Bari, Italy
Interests: landslides; 2D–3D finite element analysis; landslide activity monitoring; geomorphological analysis; geotechnical analysis

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Guest Editor
Department of Earth and Geoenvironmental Sciences, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Bari, Italy
Interests: natural hazards; geotechnical engineering; engineering geology; rock and soil slope stability; numerical modelling; landslide propagation analysis; underground cave stability
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to invite papers for our upcoming Special Issue entitled "Innovative Approaches to Landslide Monitoring and Urban-Scale Slope Stability Analysis". This Special Issue focuses on the intersection of innovative landslide monitoring techniques, urban scale stability analysis, and the integration of these approaches into efficient urban planning.

Landslides are a significant natural hazard, particularly in urban areas, affecting human life, infrastructure, and the environment. This Special Issue aims at highlighting recent advances in technologies such as ground-based sensors and their application in real-time monitoring and early warning systems for landslides as well as focus on how these technologies enable accurate and timely data collection on critical factors influencing landslide occurrence, such as ground displacement, soil moisture content, and groundwater levels. At the same time, we encourage submissions that demonstrate innovative approaches to analyzing slope stability at the urban centre or the basin scale. This includes the proper integration of the collection of geological and geotechnical data over wide areas, the construction of 3-D geological and geotechnical models of the study areas and the application of physically-based calculation models to assess the landslide susceptibility of urban slopes.

A key aspect of this Special Issue is the integration of landslide risk assessment and stability analysis into urban planning. We seek contributions that discuss the development and implementation of effective strategies, policies, guidelines and frameworks for land use planning, infrastructure development, as well as landslide prevention and preparedness, early warning systems and sustainable land management practices in landslide-prone urban environments. By integrating advanced monitoring technologies, urban scale analysis and urban planning, we can better prepare communities to mitigate the impacts of landslides and protect lives and infrastructure.

We welcome original research articles and reviews covering a wide range of topics including, but not limited to, innovative approaches to landslide monitoring, case studies of urban-scale slope stability analysis, strategies for integrating landslide risk assessment into urban planning, and interdisciplinary methodologies combining geotechnical engineering, urban planning, and environmental sciences.

We look forward to receiving your contributions to this critical and evolving field of research.

Submission Topics:

  • Innovative approaches in landslide monitoring and risk prediction.
  • Case studies of urban scale slope stability analysis.
  • Strategies for incorporating landslide risk assessment into urban planning and policy-making.
  • Interdisciplinary methodologies combining geotechnical engineering, urban planning, and environmental science.

This Special Issue welcomes original research articles and reviews that link these themes, including the mapping of landslides over wide areas, landslide susceptibility, risk and impact analyses, and rainfall-induced slope failures.

Dr. Nunzio Luciano Fazio
Dr. Piernicola Lollino
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • landslide monitoring
  • slope stability
  • ground-based instruments
  • remote sensing
  • slope stabilization strategies
  • landslide risk
  • landslide risk assessment into urban planning

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

19 pages, 9849 KiB  
Article
Unraveling Information from Seismic Signals Generated by Gravitational Mass Movements
by Emma Suriñach and Elsa Leticia Flores-Márquez
Geosciences 2024, 14(11), 294; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences14110294 - 1 Nov 2024
Viewed by 528
Abstract
A practical analysis of the spectrograms of the seismic data generated by gravitational mass movements (GMMs), such as snow avalanches, landslides, lahars, and debris flows recorded on one sensor, is presented. The seismic signal produced by these movements is analyzed in terms of [...] Read more.
A practical analysis of the spectrograms of the seismic data generated by gravitational mass movements (GMMs), such as snow avalanches, landslides, lahars, and debris flows recorded on one sensor, is presented. The seismic signal produced by these movements is analyzed in terms of the shape of the initial section of the spectrogram, which corresponds to the start of the movement of the gravitational mass. The shape of the envelope of the spectrogram is a consequence of the progressive reception of high-frequency energy in the signal as the gravitational mass (GM) approaches the sensor because of the attenuation properties of the seismic waves in the ground. An exponential law was used to fit this envelope of the onset signal. The proposed methodology allows us to obtain the propagation characteristics of different types of GMM. The analysis of the adjusted parameters for different types of GMM allows us to assert that differences of one order of magnitude exist in the values of these parameters depending on the type of event. In addition, differences in the values of the exponent were obtained between the events of each type of the analyzed GMM. We present a template of different curves for each type of GMM with the corresponding parameter values that can help professionals characterize a GMM with only one seismic record (one seismic sensor) whenever the mass movement approaches the recording sensor or passes over it. Full article
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